World Chess Championship (Game 6)

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AdminX
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Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by AdminX »

Time: White 07:51 - Black 01:29

[Event "World Chess Championship 2008"]
[Site "Bonn"]
[Date "2008.10.21"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Anand, Viswanathan"]
[Black "Kramnik, Vladimir"]
[Result "*"]
[WhiteElo "2783"]
[BlackElo "2772"]
[PlyCount "80"]
[EventDate "2008.10.21"]
[EventRounds "6"]
[EventCountry "GER"]

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qc2 d5 5. cxd5 Qxd5 6. Nf3 Qf5 7. Qb3 Nc6 8.
Bd2 O-O 9. h3 b6 10. g4 Qa5 11. Rc1 Bb7 12. a3 Bxc3 13. Bxc3 Qd5 14. Qxd5 Nxd5
15. Bd2 Nf6 16. Rg1 Rac8 17. Bg2 Ne7 18. Bb4 c5 19. dxc5 Rfd8 20. Ne5 Bxg2 21.
Rxg2 bxc5 22. Rxc5 Ne4 23. Rxc8 Rxc8 24. Nd3 Nd5 25. Bd2 Rc2 26. Bc1 f5 27. Kd1
Rc8 28. f3 Nd6 29. Ke1 a5 30. e3 e5 31. gxf5 e4 32. fxe4 Nxe4 33. Bd2 a4 34.
Nf2 Nd6 35. Rg4 Nc4 36. e4 Nf6 37. Rg3 Nxb2 38. e5 Nd5 39. f6 Kf7 40. Ne4 Nc4 *

[d]2r5/5kpp/5P2/3nP3/p1n1N3/P5RP/3B4/4K3 w - - 0 41
Last edited by AdminX on Tue Oct 21, 2008 6:56 pm, edited 2 times in total.
"Good decisions come from experience, and experience comes from bad decisions."
__________________________________________________________________
Ted Summers
Anil
Posts: 540
Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2006 2:56 pm

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by Anil »

Looks like Anand will use all of his remaining time for his 40th move. :)
Terry McCracken
Posts: 16465
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Location: Canada

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by Terry McCracken »

JuLieN wrote:Now that's clearly a third victory for Anand, and Kramnik will never be able to come back in this match.

I feel sorry for Kramnik, because he's clerly not playing at his best level, making many blunders. That's sad because he's ill (he suffers from ankylosing spondylitis, wich necesitated surgery last year), and had the force to come back and prepare for this match during months.

When one remember that this player is the one who defeated Kasparov, and the only one that got the GMI title without gaining the IM one first, one can only feel sad. Especielly when everyone seems to cheer for his opponent (I like Anand too, but we should cheer for best chess, not for one of those two gentlemen).
Although I'm empathetic for Kramnik, he too gain his title when Kasparov was under terrible emotional strain going through a divorce and never gave Kasparov a rematch.

What goes around often comes around.
Terry McCracken
swami
Posts: 6662
Joined: Thu Mar 09, 2006 4:21 am

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by swami »

Anil wrote:Looks like Anand will use all of his remaining time for his 40th move. :)
Another blunder...

Engine thinks white is now at +5.41!!

Anand,V - Kramnik,V, WCC 2008 Bonn 2008
[d] 2r5/5kpp/5P2/3nP3/p1n1N3/P5RP/3B4/4K3 w - - 0 1

Analysis by bright-0.3a:

Code: Select all

41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.f7 Ne7 43.Ng5+ Kxe5 44.Nxh7 Nxa3 45.h4 Nc2+ 46.Kd1 a3 47.Bc3+ Kf4 48.Kxc2 Nf5 49.Rg6 
  +-  (5.13)   Depth: 13/35   00:00:01  7598kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Rd4 Kg3 50.Rxa4 
  +-  (5.24)   Depth: 14/35   00:00:04  26144kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Kf2 Kg4 50.Rd4+ Kf5 51.Rxa4 
  +-  (5.26)   Depth: 15/42   00:00:07  43360kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Kf2 Kg4 50.Rd4+ Kf5 51.Rxa4 
  +-  (5.26)   Depth: 16/42   00:00:11  66296kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Kf2 Kg4 50.Rd4+ Kf5 51.Rxa4 Ke5 52.Ke3 
  +-  (5.41)   Depth: 17/61   00:00:23  137mN
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AdminX
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Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by AdminX »

[Event "World Chess Championship 2008"]
[Site "Bonn"]
[Date "2008.10.21"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Anand, Viswanathan"]
[Black "Kramnik, Vladimir"]
[Result "*"]
[WhiteElo "2783"]
[BlackElo "2772"]
[PlyCount "81"]
[EventDate "2008.10.21"]
[EventRounds "6"]
[EventCountry "GER"]

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qc2 d5 5. cxd5 Qxd5 6. Nf3 Qf5 7. Qb3 Nc6 8.
Bd2 O-O 9. h3 b6 10. g4 Qa5 11. Rc1 Bb7 12. a3 Bxc3 13. Bxc3 Qd5 14. Qxd5 Nxd5
15. Bd2 Nf6 16. Rg1 Rac8 17. Bg2 Ne7 18. Bb4 c5 19. dxc5 Rfd8 20. Ne5 Bxg2 21.
Rxg2 bxc5 22. Rxc5 Ne4 23. Rxc8 Rxc8 24. Nd3 Nd5 25. Bd2 Rc2 26. Bc1 f5 27. Kd1
Rc8 28. f3 Nd6 29. Ke1 a5 30. e3 e5 31. gxf5 e4 32. fxe4 Nxe4 33. Bd2 a4 34.
Nf2 Nd6 35. Rg4 Nc4 36. e4 Nf6 37. Rg3 Nxb2 38. e5 Nd5 39. f6 Kf7 40. Ne4 Nc4
41. fxg7 *

[d]2r5/5kPp/8/3nP3/p1n1N3/P5RP/3B4/4K3 b - - 0 41
"Good decisions come from experience, and experience comes from bad decisions."
__________________________________________________________________
Ted Summers
Terry McCracken
Posts: 16465
Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2007 4:16 am
Location: Canada

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by Terry McCracken »

swami wrote:
Anil wrote:Looks like Anand will use all of his remaining time for his 40th move. :)
Another blunder...

Engine thinks white is now at +5.41!!

Anand,V - Kramnik,V, WCC 2008 Bonn 2008
[d] 2r5/5kpp/5P2/3nP3/p1n1N3/P5RP/3B4/4K3 w - - 0 1

Analysis by bright-0.3a:

Code: Select all

41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.f7 Ne7 43.Ng5+ Kxe5 44.Nxh7 Nxa3 45.h4 Nc2+ 46.Kd1 a3 47.Bc3+ Kf4 48.Kxc2 Nf5 49.Rg6 
  +-  (5.13)   Depth: 13/35   00:00:01  7598kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Rd4 Kg3 50.Rxa4 
  +-  (5.24)   Depth: 14/35   00:00:04  26144kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Kf2 Kg4 50.Rd4+ Kf5 51.Rxa4 
  +-  (5.26)   Depth: 15/42   00:00:07  43360kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Kf2 Kg4 50.Rd4+ Kf5 51.Rxa4 
  +-  (5.26)   Depth: 16/42   00:00:11  66296kN
41.Rxg7+ Ke6 42.Ng5+ Kf5 43.f7 Nxe5 44.Rg8 Nxf7 45.Rxc8 Nxg5 46.Bxg5 Kxg5 47.Rc5 Kh4 48.Rxd5 Kxh3 49.Kf2 Kg4 50.Rd4+ Kf5 51.Rxa4 Ke5 52.Ke3 
  +-  (5.41)   Depth: 17/61   00:00:23  137mN
Yes, Kramnik made several poor moves. Anand should go on to win easily.

Kramnik is out of this match.
Terry McCracken
Anil
Posts: 540
Joined: Sat Nov 11, 2006 2:56 pm

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by Anil »

Is Anand doing this deliberately ... to give Kramnik some hope?
Playing fxg7 instead of Rxg7.

I am sure after this game, Anand will re-work on his chess tactics. :)
Last edited by Anil on Tue Oct 21, 2008 7:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
swami
Posts: 6662
Joined: Thu Mar 09, 2006 4:21 am

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by swami »

Terry McCracken wrote: Yes, Kramnik made several poor moves. Anand should go on to win easily.

Kramnik is out of this match.
Well, Anand do make blunders as well... fxg7 is not so good move.

Engine thinks white is now at +2.37.

Anand missed the easy winning move.

Anand,V - Kramnik,V, WCC 2008 Bonn 2008
2r5/5kPp/8/3nP3/p1n1N3/P5RP/3B4/4K3 b - - 0 1

Analysis by bright-0.3a:

Code: Select all

41...Nxd2 42.Nd6+ Kg8 43.Nxc8 
  +-  (5.21)   Depth: 1/5   00:00:00
41...Ne7 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 
  +-  (2.55)   Depth: 1/8   00:00:00
41...Rd8 
  +-  (2.46)   Depth: 1/8   00:00:00
41...Rd8 
  +-  (2.46)   Depth: 1/8   00:00:00
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 
  +-  (2.44)   Depth: 1/8   00:00:00
41...h5 
  +-  (2.40)   Depth: 1/8   00:00:00
41...Kg8 42.Nf6+ Nxf6 43.exf6 
  +-  (2.22)   Depth: 1/8   00:00:00
41...Kg8 42.Nf6+ Nxf6 43.exf6 Re8+ 44.Kd1 
  +-  (2.20)   Depth: 2/8   00:00:00
41...Kg8 42.Nf6+ Nxf6 43.exf6 Re8+ 44.Kd1 
  +-  (2.20)   Depth: 3/10   00:00:00
41...Kg8 42.Nf6+ Nxf6 43.exf6 Re8+ 44.Kd1 
  +-  (2.20)   Depth: 4/10   00:00:00
41...Kg8 42.Nf6+ Nxf6 43.exf6 Re8+ 44.Kd1 Rd8 
  +-  (2.23)   Depth: 5/10   00:00:00
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Kxd6 
  +-  (1.92)   Depth: 6/13   00:00:00
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Kxd6 45.Kd3 Ke6 
  +-  (1.85)   Depth: 6/14   00:00:00  23kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Kxd6 45.Kd3 Ke6 
  +-  (1.85)   Depth: 7/19   00:00:00  54kN
41...Kg8 42.Rd3 Ndb6 43.Bf4 Kxg7 44.Ke2 Re8 
  +-  (1.63)   Depth: 7/19   00:00:00  114kN
41...Kg8 42.Rd3 Nc7 43.Rd7 Ne8 44.Nf6+ Nxf6 45.exf6 Nxa3 46.Ke2 Nc4 
  +-  (1.87)   Depth: 8/22   00:00:00  181kN
41...Kg8 42.Rd3 Nc7 43.Rd7 Ne8 44.Nf6+ Nxf6 45.exf6 Nb6 46.Rd3 Nc4 47.Ke2 Re8+ 48.Be3 Nxe3 49.Rxe3 
  +-  (2.55)   Depth: 9/36   00:00:00  250kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Nf6 45.Bb4 Kf7 46.Ke3 Rxg7 47.Rxg7+ Kxg7 
  +-  (2.16)   Depth: 9/36   00:00:00  499kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd3 Nxc3 47.Kxc3 Kxd6 
  +-  (2.03)   Depth: 10/36   00:00:00  947kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd3 Nxc3 47.Kxc3 Kxd6 
  +-  (2.03)   Depth: 11/36   00:00:00  1660kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd3 Nxc3 47.Kxc3 Kxd6 48.Kb4 Ke6 49.Kxa4 
  +-  (2.15)   Depth: 12/36   00:00:00  3476kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.Ke2 Kxd6 45.Kd3 Nf6 46.Bc3 Ke6 47.Kc4 Ne4 48.Re3 Rc8+ 49.Kd4 
  +-  (2.01)   Depth: 13/36   00:00:01  8355kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.h4 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Bd4 Kxd6 47.h5 Nf4 48.h6 Kd5 49.Rf3 Ne6 
  +-  (2.27)   Depth: 14/36   00:00:02  13374kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.h4 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd2 Kxd6 47.h5 Nxc3 48.Kxc3 h6 49.Kb4 Ke6 50.Kxa4 Kf7 
  +-  (2.26)   Depth: 15/38   00:00:04  28797kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.h4 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd2 Kxd6 47.h5 Nxc3 48.Kxc3 h6 49.Kb4 Ke6 50.Kxa4 Kf7 
  +-  (2.26)   Depth: 16/38   00:00:08  51922kN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.h4 Kxd6 45.h5 Nf6 46.h6 Ke6 47.Ke2 Rc8 48.Kf3 Rd8 49.Bf4 Rd3+ 50.Ke2 Rxg3 51.Bxg3 
  +-  (2.47)   Depth: 17/38   00:00:18  117mN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.h4 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd2 Kxd6 47.h5 Nxc3 48.Kxc3 h6 49.Kb4 Ke6 50.Kxa4 Kf7 51.Kb4 Rc8 
  +-  (2.65)   Depth: 18/40   00:00:36  235mN
41...Rg8 42.Nd6+ Nxd6 43.exd6 Ke6 44.h4 Nf6 45.Bc3 Nd5 46.Kd2 Kxd6 47.h5 Nxc3 48.Kxc3 h6 49.Kb4 Ke6 50.Kxa4 Kf7 51.Kb4 Rb8+ 52.Kc5 Kg8 
  +-  (2.37)   Depth: 19/44   00:01:42  667mN
Last edited by swami on Tue Oct 21, 2008 7:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Albert Silver
Posts: 3026
Joined: Wed Mar 08, 2006 9:57 pm
Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by Albert Silver »

Anil wrote:Is Anand doing this deliberately ... to give Kramnik some hope?

I am sure after this game, Anand will re-work on his chess tactics. :)
Most are happening after move 30, so it may also be a physical conditioning problem.
"Tactics are the bricks and sticks that make up a game, but positional play is the architectural blueprint."
Terry McCracken
Posts: 16465
Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2007 4:16 am
Location: Canada

Re: World Chess Championship (Game 6)

Post by Terry McCracken »

AdminX wrote:[Event "World Chess Championship 2008"]
[Site "Bonn"]
[Date "2008.10.21"]
[Round "6"]
[White "Anand, Viswanathan"]
[Black "Kramnik, Vladimir"]
[Result "*"]
[WhiteElo "2783"]
[BlackElo "2772"]
[PlyCount "81"]
[EventDate "2008.10.21"]
[EventRounds "6"]
[EventCountry "GER"]

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. Qc2 d5 5. cxd5 Qxd5 6. Nf3 Qf5 7. Qb3 Nc6 8.
Bd2 O-O 9. h3 b6 10. g4 Qa5 11. Rc1 Bb7 12. a3 Bxc3 13. Bxc3 Qd5 14. Qxd5 Nxd5
15. Bd2 Nf6 16. Rg1 Rac8 17. Bg2 Ne7 18. Bb4 c5 19. dxc5 Rfd8 20. Ne5 Bxg2 21.
Rxg2 bxc5 22. Rxc5 Ne4 23. Rxc8 Rxc8 24. Nd3 Nd5 25. Bd2 Rc2 26. Bc1 f5 27. Kd1
Rc8 28. f3 Nd6 29. Ke1 a5 30. e3 e5 31. gxf5 e4 32. fxe4 Nxe4 33. Bd2 a4 34.
Nf2 Nd6 35. Rg4 Nc4 36. e4 Nf6 37. Rg3 Nxb2 38. e5 Nd5 39. f6 Kf7 40. Ne4 Nc4
41. fxg7 *

[d]2r5/5kPp/8/3nP3/p1n1N3/P5RP/3B4/4K3 b - - 0 41
Anand blundered! 41. Rxg7+! wins easily.
Terry McCracken